Rf switch implementation in cmos process

ABSTRACT

A dual pole dual through switch for switching between at least four states. The switch comprises four transistors such as N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor transistors, such that at each state at most one transistor is in “on” state, and the others are in “off” state. Each transistor has its own control circuit, which provides zero or negative voltage to the drain of the transistor, positive voltage to the source of the transistor, and control alternating voltage to the gate of the transistor. The switch can be used on-chip for devices. Such devices may include a base station or a handset of a cordless phone.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present disclosure relates to switching in general, and to a scheme for implementing an on-chip double pole double through (DPDT) switch, in particular.

BACKGROUND

Consumer products such as communication devices and in particular wireless telephones have long become standard commodity. There is a large number of manufacturers of such devices, which leads to tough competition and pricing wars.

One of the factors that limit price reduction is the actual cost of the device components, including diodes, resistors, or capacitors, which are external to the chip or chip-set that constitute the core of the device.

However, placing such components on the device is impossible due to the different technologies used. For example, PIN diodes cannot be placed on the chip due to their unavailability in standard CMOS process.

These components which are external to the chip or chip-set increase the price of the device in a number of ways: they have to be manufactured or purchased, their assembly within the device incurs resources including equipment and labor, and they also take up areas of the Printed Circuit Board (PCB), so that larger boards are required.

There is thus a need in the art for a communication device that can be manufactured at lower costs than traditional devices, and a method for generating the same, which will enable the price reduction without affecting the capabilities of the device.

SUMMARY

An on-chip switch for selecting between various options, and a wireless device using the same.

One aspect of the disclosure relates to a switch for selecting between four options, the switch comprising four or more transistors, wherein at any time at most one transistor is in “on” state, wherein the switch is an on-chip switch. The switch is optionally a dual pole dual through switch. The switch is optionally used in a base station of a cordless phone. The switch optionally selects between two antennas and between transmitting and receiving states. Within the switch, at least one of the at least four transistors is optionally an N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor (NMOS) transistor. The switch can further comprise one or more control circuits providing voltage to one or more of the transistors. Within the switch, the control circuit optionally comprises: components for providing zero or negative voltage to the drain of one or more transistors; components for providing positive voltage to the source of the one or more transistors; and components for providing alternating voltage to the gate of one or more transistors. Within the switch one or more of the transistors is optionally an N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor.

Another Aspect of the disclosure relates to a wireless communication device having a handset and a base station, the base station comprising: a first antenna and a second antenna, each of the first antenna and the second antenna operative to transmit and receive data; and a switch for operating the first or the second antenna, in transmitting or receiving mode, the switch comprising four transistors, each of the four transistor having its own control circuit, the switch located on a chip of the base station. Within the wireless communication device, the handset optionally comprises a switch having four transistors, the switch located on a chip of the handset.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present disclosure will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings in which corresponding or like numerals or characters indicate corresponding or like components. Unless indicated otherwise, the drawings provide exemplary embodiments or aspects of the disclosure and do not limit the scope of the disclosure. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 is a general scheme of a four transistor implementation of a DPDT switch; and

FIG. 2 is a detailed scheme of the four transistor implementation and its control circuits.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A typical cordless phone handset usually comprises one antenna, while the base station may comprise one or two antennas placed at a spatial angle to each other. At each point in time, space diversity is applied, e.g., an antenna for which the direct wave and the reflected wave create constructive interference rather than destructive interference is used.

A transmit/receive (T/R) switch is a basic building block in many Radio Frequency (RF) front end circuits. Such switch is operative, for example, in determining whether a particular antenna will be used in a transmitting state or in receiving state.

For enhanced performance, the base station or handset of a mobile communication devices such as a cordless phone requires two switches, one for selecting the preferred antenna, and the other for selecting the communication direction—transmitting or receiving.

Traditional implementations of switching comprise Dual Pole Dual Trough (DPDT) switch which comprises two pairs of diodes plus peripheral components such as resistors, impedance matching components and others.

In order to reduce costs, it would be desired to place the switches on the chip. However, in commercial CMOS technologies, PIN diodes cannot be placed on the chip since PIN diodes are not available in CMOS processes or technologies.

In a preferred embodiment of the disclosure, a pair of switches is implemented as an arrangement of four transistors.

The suggested solution reduces multiple components external to the chip by integrating their functionality into the chip. The transistor switch is implemented in a standard CMOS process, and the associated networks are based on bond wires having high quality factor. The performance of the transistor switch is similar to the performance of the external diodes implementation.

The disclosed switch contains four (4) transistors. In some embodiments N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor (NMOS) transistors are used. Each transistor has its own individual control circuit and operates autonomously of the other transistors. The switch has 4 ports: two (2) for antennas, a transmission output port Tx and a receiving input Rx. On each state, the states being: transmitting from antenna 1, transmitting from antenna 2, receiving through antenna 1, receiving through antenna 2, exactly one transistor is in “on” state and forward biased, while the others are in “off” state. In order to achieve low insertion loss and high isolation, the other three transistors are reverse biased. The control circuit controls for each transistor its gate, drain and source. The arrangement and control circuits provide for low current consumption, such as few micro-ampere, e.g. under 10 μA, as well as high isolation and flexibility as compared to prior art switches.

Referring now to FIG. 1, showing a general illustration of an embodiment of the four transistor implementation of the DPDT switch.

The arrangement receives Tx signal 112 to be transmitted, and outputs received signal Rx 116. The circuit is further connected to antenna 1 (104) and antenna 2 (108).

The arrangement comprises four transistors: transistor 1 (120), transistor 2 (124), transistor 3 (128), and transistor 4 (132). Each transistor has its own control and voltages, and is opened or closed in accordance with the requirements. Thus, transistor 1 (120) is closed if and only if the unit is in transmission mode through antenna 1 (104) and is open at all other states, transistor 2 (124) is closed if and only if the unit is in receiving mode through antenna 1 (104) and is open at all other states, transistor 3 (128) is closed if and only if the unit is in transmission mode through antenna 2 (108) and is open at all other states, and transistor 4 (132) is closed if and only if the unit is in receiving mode through antenna 2 (108) and is open at all other states.

This arrangement enables the placement of the unit on the chip, such that no special substrate is required and silicone with standard doping such as 10 ohm-cm can be used.

The four transistor arrangement reduces the total equivalent parasitic capacitance of the three transistors that are in “off” state when the fourth transistor is in “on” state. In each switch state, all parasitic capacitances are in series and thus there is no need for an induction coil to reduce the total parasitic capacitance.

In the disclosed arrangement, each transistor receives the correct voltage according to whether it should be open or close. When any of the transistors requires a positive V_(bias), the others require its negative value.

Referring now to FIG. 2, showing a more detailed scheme of the four transistor arrangement and its control circuits.

In order for each transistor to pass AC, it has to be placed on its gate DC voltage. For generating the DC voltage, components 204 provide the drain of transistor 1 (120) with zero or positive voltage, and components 208 provide the same voltage to the source of transistor 1 (120). Components 212 provide the complementary voltage to the gate of transistor 1 (120), the voltage alternating in accordance with a control signal between the zero or positive voltage of components 204, 208 and the complementary voltage of components 212, in order to open or close transistor 1 (120). Components 204, 208 and 212 are included in the control circuit of transistor 1 (120).

Components 204, 208 and 212 provide termination, so that the antenna has constant impedance relative to the ground. Each of components 204, 208 and 212 also serves as a low pass filter, which disables the signals from going back to their source.

Transistors 232, 234, 236, 238, 240, 242, 244 and 246 operate as DC blocks, eliminating DC from leaking from one transistor to the neighboring ones.

It will be appreciated that the disclosed control circuit is exemplary only, and other components can be used for enabling the transistors to function so that each of them is opened and closed at the correct timing in accordance with control signals. The transistors and all components can be placed on-chip, thus reducing the unit price.

It will also be appreciated that the components 204, 208, 212 and other components associated with transistor 1 (120) are representative, and that symmetric control circuits 220, 224 and 228 are provided for transistor 2 (124), transistor 3 (128), and transistor 4 (132), respectively.

In some embodiments, transmission 112 is passed through separate capacitors 232 and 234 in order to avoid DC coupling between transistor 1 (120) and transistor 2 (128), and similarly for capacitors 236 and 238.

The disclosed arrangement can be used also in environments in which only one antenna is available, such as in handsets. The reduced price and size may justify such usage over off-chip diode even if not all its functionality is used.

The disclosed arrangement is not limited to any type of devices, and can be used also for any other environments in which multiple switches are required, such as wireless local area network access points (WLAN AP), cellular phones, communication systems, radar systems or the like.

It will also be appreciated that the disclosed arrangement can be widened to include more transistors and control circuits for switching between more options, by using a switch matrix, such as an N×M matrix of elements, wherein each element can be implemented as a single series NMOS, an L series shunt combination, or a T/PI combination. Any of these combinations can be implemented as a complementary switch, comprising NMOS and PMOS.

It will be appreciated that various modifications and variations can be designed. For example, different peripheral components and control circuits can be used.

While the disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the disclosure. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation, material, step of component to the teachings without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosed subject matter not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but only by the claims that follow. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A switch for selecting between four options, the switch comprising at least four transistors, wherein at any time at most one transistor is in “on” state, wherein the switch is an on-chip switch.
 2. The switch of claim 1 wherein the switch is a dual pole dual through switch.
 3. The switch of claim 1 wherein the switch is used in a base station of a cordless phone.
 4. The switch of claim 2 wherein the switch selects between two antennas and between transmitting and receiving states.
 5. The switch of claim 1 wherein at least one of the at least four transistors is an N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor (NMOS) transistor.
 6. The switch of claim 1 further comprising at least one control circuit providing voltage to at least one of the at least four transistors.
 7. The switch of claim 6 wherein the control circuit comprises: components for providing zero or negative voltage to the drain of the at least one transistor; components for providing positive voltage to the source of the at least one transistor; and components for providing alternating voltage to the gate of the at least one transistor.
 8. The switch of claim 1 wherein at least one of the at least four transistors is an N-channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor.
 9. A wireless communication device having a handset and a base station, the base station comprising: a first antenna and a second antenna, each of the first antenna and the second antenna operative to transmit and receive data; and a switch for operating the first or the second antenna, in transmitting or receiving mode, the switch comprising four transistors, each of the four transistor having its own control circuit, the switch located on a chip of the base station.
 10. The wireless communication device of claim 9 wherein the handset comprises a switch having four transistors, the switch located on a chip of the handset. 